Why is Highguard's website offline?
Studio silence amid a rocky launch and internal shakeups
Highguard’s official site going dark fed immediate concern among players, but the outage is only one symptom of a larger, public stumble for the raid‑shooter and its developer, Wildlight Entertainment. The team has acknowledged the website problem but described it as an administrative issue and — crucially — a low‑priority item because they consider the game's reputational damage already done.
The situation around the studio has been fraught: the game launched to mixed reception, Wildlight announced layoffs soon afterward, and reporting later suggested the studio received backing from Tencent. Despite those shocks, developers have pushed out a content update, teased new modes, and insisted Highguard is not being abandoned. They’ve also revealed plans for further patches and even hinted at new features like additional maps and tools.
Why this matters
- Player confidence: an inaccessible site after layoffs amplifies fears that the project may be winding down.
- Transparency concerns: revelations about funding and staffing change how communities and partners evaluate the studio’s long‑term viability.
- Product continuity: keeping live service players engaged depends on a steady drumbeat of fixes, communication, and trust.
What comes next
Wildlight says more content patches are coming and that the team remains committed to delivering updates. For players, the practical takeaway is to watch in‑game channels and official developer posts for patch notes and server news rather than relying solely on the studio website. For observers, the episode is a reminder that early live‑service launches and company shakeups can quickly undermine public confidence even when some development work continues behind the scenes.